photo: Creative Commons / Clemensmarabu
Chinese lock and key from Yunnan Province, early 20th century
photo: Creative Commons / Audrius Meskauskas
Old style Hermes typewriter with jammed type bars. A typewriter is a mechanical or electromechanical device with keys that, when pressed, cause characters to be printed on a medium, usually paper.
photo: Public Domain / Batholith (talk)
Modern hairdryer
photo: Creative Commons
Electromechanical meters
photo: Public Domain / Siebrand
American family watching TV, 1958
photo: Creative Commons / Shadowjin
A CO2 tank
photo: Creative Commons
Meters
photo: Creative Commons
Hammond XK-1 Because of the difficulties of transporting the heavy Hammond organ, bass pedal board (a B-3 organ, bench, and pedal board weighs 425 pounds/193 kg) and Leslie speaker cabinets to performance venues, and because of the risk of technical problems that are associated with any vintage electromechanical instrument, musicians sought out a more portable, reliable way of obtaining the Hammond sound.
photo: Creative Commons / HenryLi
Electrical engineering
photo: Creative Commons / Silverrebel
ZU-23-2 firing. Vitebsk, Belarus. ZU-23M - Upgraded Soviet variant. Has new targeting system (which includes laser range finder, television channel, optical mechanic device
photo: Creative Commons / Liftarn
Marchant Figurematic (1950-52)
photo: Creative Commons / Flickr upload bot
Blowdryer
photo: Creative Commons / Thatbrock (talk | contribs)
An example of an historic Strowger-type selector assembly. This has a single (vertical) axis, and is driven by a gear instead of a typical electromagnet.
photo: Creative Commons / Mohylek
Electronic typewriter - the final stage in typewriter development. A 1989 Canon Type star 110
photo: Creative Commons
The Zuse Z3, 1941, considered the world's first working programmable, fully automatic computing machine.
photo: Creative Commons / Nullport
Pacific Electric Railway
photo: Creative Commons / Kozuch
Boeing 767 Section 41 fuselage nose assembly at the Boeing Everett Factory. Targeted at the emerging mid-size wide-body aircraft market, the Boeing 767 incorporated technological advances in avionics, engines, and wing design
photo: Creative Commons
Master Clock 36A. This clock was originally made with a synchronising mechanism which would be driven by an external signal; such extras were removed by the manufacturers if the clock went back to them for later repairs
photo: Creative Commons / S1
Kovrov (Russian: КовроÌ?в) is a city in Vladimir Oblast, Russia, situated 250 km from Moscow on the right bank of the Klyazma River (tributary of the Oka). Kovrov is the administrative center of Kovrovsky District of Vladimir Oblast. Kovrov's population as of 2002 Census was 155,499 (down from 159,942 recorded in the 1989 Census), making it the second-largest city in Vladimir Oblast (after Vladimir). In 1977 Kovrov's population had been estimated at 140,000.[3]
photo: Creative Commons
The Rasmus Sørnes Clock
photo: Creative Commons
Basic block diagram of an electronic energy meter
photo: Creative Commons
A Sony high definition video camera
photo: Creative Commons
Kurzweil's extension of Moore's law from integrated circuits to earlier transistors, vacuum tubes, relays and electromechanical computers.